Tuck Rule Game
| |||
Date | January 19, 2002 | ||
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Stadium | Foxboro Stadium, Foxborough, Massachusetts | ||
TV in the United States | |||
Network | CBS | ||
Announcers | Greg Gumbel and Phil Simms |
The 2001-2002 AFC Divisional Playoff game, known everywhere but Boston as the "Tuck rule game"[1] and by Patriots fans as the "Snow Bowl,"[2][3] was the playoff game between the New England Patriots and the Oakland Raiders. It took place on January 19, 2002 at Foxboro Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts, then the home stadium of the Patriots. The name "Tuck rule game" originates from the controversial game-changing play. In the play, Raiders' cornerback Charles Woodson sacked Patriots' quarterback Tom Brady, which in turn, caused a fumble that was eventually recovered by Raiders' linebacker Greg Biekert. Officials reviewed the play, and determined that Brady's arm was moving forward, thus making it an incomplete pass. As a result, the original call was overturned, and the ball was given back to the Patriots. On the final play of regulation, Patriots' placekicker Adam Vinatieri kicked a 45-yard field goal to tie the game 13-13, which sent the game into overtime. In overtime, Vinatieri kicked a 23-yard field goal to win the game for the Patriots.
The "tuck rule" call
Playing in a heavy snow storm, Oakland led at halftime, 7–0, and then took a 13–3 lead in the third quarter after two field goals. Brady rushed in for a touchdown to cut the lead to 13–10. With less than two minutes left to play, the Patriots drove the ball down the field. While they were slightly out of field goal range, Brady dropped back to pass and dropped the ball after being hit by Woodson. Raiders linebacker Greg Biekert dove on the ball, and was initially credited with a recovered fumble.
In 1999, though, a new rule had been introduced, which eventually became known as the tuck rule:
NFL Rule 3, Section 21, Article 2, Note 2. When [an offensive] player is holding the ball to pass it forward, any intentional forward movement of his arm starts a forward pass, even if the player loses possession of the ball as he is attempting to tuck it back toward his body. Also, if the player has tucked the ball into his body and then loses possession, it is a fumble.[4]
Citing this rule, referee Walt Coleman determined that the rule applied because Brady's arm was moving forward before he decided not to release the ball and Brady had not subsequently "tucked" the ball into his body. Thus, the original call was overturned, and New England maintained possession despite Brady having both hands on the ball at the time of the sack.
Charles Woodson was quoted after the game during the press conference as saying, "It's a bullshit call."
The outcome
With the Patriots given new life, Brady completed a 13-yard pass to David Patten that advanced the ball to the Raider 29. Shortly thereafter, Vinatieri came on to attempt a game-tying field goal. Kicking into the wind and snow, Vinatieri's line-drive kick was good from 45 yards away with 27 seconds left, and the game was tied. After the ensuing kickoff, the Raiders decided not to attempt to advance the ball and let the game go to overtime.
The Patriots won the toss and took the ball to start overtime. They drove 61 yards in 15 plays, with Brady completing all eight of his pass attempts for 45 yards. On fourth down and 4 from the Raider 28, Brady hit Patten for a six-yard completion. A few plays later, Vinatieri kicked a 23-yard field goal and the Patriots won 16–13. It was the final game at Foxboro Stadium.
With the win, the Patriots advanced to the AFC Championship Game against the Pittsburgh Steelers, where they scored a 24–17 victory, and then defeated the NFC champion St. Louis Rams 20–17 in Super Bowl XXXVI on a last-second field goal by Vinatieri to capture their first Super Bowl championship.
Starting lineups
Oakland | Position | New England |
---|---|---|
OFFENSE | ||
Tim Brown | WR | Troy Brown |
Barry Sims | LT | Matt Light |
Steve Wisniewski | LG | Mike Compton |
Adam Treu | C | Damien Woody |
Frank Middleton | RG | Joe Andruzzi |
Lincoln Kennedy | RT | Greg Robinson-Randall |
Roland Williams | TE | Rod Rutledge |
Jerry Rice | WR | David Patten |
Rich Gannon | QB | Tom Brady |
Charlie Garner | RB | Antowain Smith |
Jon Ritchie | FB | Marc Edwards |
DEFENSE | ||
Regan Upshaw | LE | Bobby Hamilton |
Rod Coleman | LDT | Brandon Mitchell |
Grady Jackson | RDT | Riddick Parker |
Tony Bryant | RE | Anthony Pleasant |
William Thomas | LOLB | Mike Vrabel |
Greg Biekert | MLB | Tedy Bruschi |
Elijah Alexander | ROLB | Roman Phifer |
Charles Woodson | LCB | Ty Law |
Eric Allen | RCB | Otis Smith |
Johnnie Harris | SS | Lawyer Milloy |
Anthony Dorsett | FS | Tebucky Jones |
References
- ^ Sando, Mike (2008-01-25). "Reviewing instant replay's controversial playoff history". ESPN. Retrieved 2008-03-16.
- ^ Silver, Michael (2005-02-04). "The five most significant plays in recent NFL history". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 2007-09-19.
- ^ Ross Jr., Sam (2003-01-23). "After further review, coaches worth it". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. TRIB: Total Media. Retrieved 2007-09-19.
- ^ Tuck Rule Hard to Grasp Washington Post.
External links
- Referee criticism
- ESPN recap of the game
- CNNSI recap of the game